Docta Ignorantia LXXI
On Apologetics
By David R. Graham
Good pick up on the word apologetic. It is a technical word, often
misunderstood. You're right, it does not mean a humble apologetic
attitude, feeling sorry for what we believe, such as we ordinarily might
take it to mean. It means something very specific and good. Tillich
uses these old words and this is the value of knowing his work, because
you actually learn the language of the art.
Apologetics is the approach of entering into the discussion of
non-believers WHERE THEY ARE rather than as in Dogmatics (Barth) making
non-believers discuss only in your terms. In other words, in
apologetics -- the Greek root does not mean feeling sorry it means being
strong and fearless in the hurrly-burrly of life -- we talk with folks
from where they are and help them forward from there rather than laying
something on them and expecting them to accept or reject it.
Tillich and I are both apologetic theologians in this sense. All the
great ones are, starting with St. Paul.
Theologians tend to become dogmatic -- laying things on folks -- and
leave off the apologetic approach. This is wrong at any time.
Christianity got strong in Rome because the early father were mostly
apologetic theologians, they entered into discussions from where people
were, no matter where they were, and worked them forward from there.
This is actually the TRULY humble approach, where humble does not mean
weak but just the opposite, so strong as top fear going nowhere and able
to stand on one's feet and handle affairs no matter what. That is true
humility, born of faith in the Everlasting Arms of the Father supporting
one.
Adwaitha Hermitage
August 23, 1998
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